[0001] The invention relates to an apparatus for exercising the arm muscles of the human
body.
[0002] There are numerous devices in existence for exercising the arm muscles such as parallel
bars, vaulting-horses and bucks, punch balls, home trainers, dumb-bells, spring grip
dumb-bells, as well as various spring expanders. Most of these appliances are intended
for toning up one or more muscles.
[0003] The practising of six movements of the forearm muscles, such as supination (outward
rotation of the thumb) and pronation (inward rotation of the thumb), whether or not
in combination with biceps and triceps (the principal flexors and tensors of the arms),
as well as radial adduction (the arms outstretched with the thumbs turned inward,
whilst the hands are moved towards one another by means of movements of the wrist
in the horizontal plane), ulnar adduction (the arms outstretched with the thumbs turned
outward, whilst the hands are moved inward towards one another by means of movements
of the wrist in the horizontal plane), radial abduction (the arms outstretched with
the thumbs turned outward, whilst the hands are moved outward away from one another
(="ab") by means of movements of the wrist in the horizontal plane) and ulnar abduction
(the arms outstretched with the thumbs turned inward, whilst the hands are moved outward
away from one another by means of movements of the wrist in the horizontal plane)
is of great significance for heavy athletics, body- building, pole-vaulting, exercises
on the vaulting- horse and the rings, walking on the hands, rowing, canoeing and gymnastics,
whilst the said exercises of movements of the forearm muscles can also be used for
rehabilitation.
[0004] No suitable apparatus are available for the specific practising of supination and
pronation movements in which overstraining is precluded. Supination and pronation
movements of the forearm afford training of the following muscles:
- Musculus flexor carpi radialis, general hand flexor, providing support in pronation;
- Musculus brachioradialis, muscle of the radius, permitting pronation and supination
depending on its position;
- Musculus pronator teres, muscle producing pronation;
- Musculus brachialis, internal arm muscle for tightening the capsula of the elbow
joint;
- Musculus biceps brachii, two-headed arm muscle, supinating the forearm.
[0005] To tone up the forearms as regards their twisting function (for instance, in tightening
or slackening of a screw), whereby the supination and the pronation movement of the
forearm is practised, exercises with dumb-bells are possible. They require the user
to stand upright and hold a dumb-bell in each hand, whilst the arms hang slightly
away from the body.
[0006] Now when the dumb-bells are caused to rotate on their mass centre about the axis
of the arms, which are held outstretched, the supination and the pronation movement
can be practised. This involves turning the radius round the ulna backward and forward.
[0007] A disadvantage of these exercises with the dumb-bells is the so-called overshooting
(flywheel effect) due to the muscles not being developed equally strongly, so that
one muscle is already overstrained when another muscle is not yet near the limit of
its capacity.
[0008] The capsula has to bear the brunt of the braking action, which may result in injuries
to the articulus cubiti (elbow joint) and dislocation of the ulnar and/ or radial
collateral ligaments. One consequence may be a considerable damage to the capsula
of the elbow joint.
[0009] Bar-swinging exercises have been devised for the separate practising of radial adduction,
ulnar adduction, radial abduction and ulnar abduction. These exercises also involve
certain risks, however, because the mass of the bar is prone to overshooting.
[0010] It is an object of the present invention to provide an apparatus of the type mentioned
in the opening paragraph with which the aforesaid six movements of the forearm muscles
can be practised on both arms at once or on either arm in turn. To this end, such
an apparatus has been designed so that it comprises a base with an inclined working
surface mounted above it, whose height is adjustable and which is adjoined on both
sides by means of sleeves by shafts, which shafts are so mounted on the base as to
be rotatable about their long axis against resistance and which are provided at their
top above the working surface with transversely attached hand grips by means of which
the shafts can be loaded with a torque on their long axes.
[0011] The apparatus has the advantage that it now becomes possible to step up the muscular
tension in a muscle or a set of muscles slowly and continuously and subsequently reduce
it again, which makes for safer and far more pleasant practising than the inconvenient
movements involved in dumb-bell turning and bar swinging.
[0012] A further elaboration of the invention provides for a transverse arm fitted to the
rotatable attachment of each vertical shaft to the base, the end of which arm carries
a spiral spring disposed crosswise to the shaft.
[0013] An additional feature is possible in that the rotatable means of attachment of each
vertical shaft to the base may comprise a torsion spring mounted round the shaft or
in line with it.
[0014] This has the advantage that the muscular tensions can be stepped up in small increments
to be adjusted by the user through increases in spring tension, whereby flywheel effects
are precluded.
[0015] Furthermore, the said advantage can also be gained if the resistance of the rotatable
attachment of the vertical shafts to the base is effected by means of compressed-air
or hydraulic springs, provision being made for limitation with the aid of an adjustable
valve.
[0016] It is to be observed that from U.S. Patent No. 3 428 311 a rod which can be rotated
with the aid of a handle is known. At one end the rod has the said handle and at the
other end it is provided with a ball which can rotate with a friction that may be
adjusted very approximately in a seat mounted on the base.
[0017] This apparatus has the drawback that only supination and pronation movements can
be practised, with a friction between ball and seat that is less simply adjustable
to the user. The measurement of the torque exercised on the bar is erratic with this
apparatus, so that individual adjustment of the device is also hardly practicable.
In addition, it offers no possibility of combining muscular movements, with particular
reference to a combination of biceps and triceps with pronation or supination.
[0018] For a further elucidation of the invention, two embodiments will now be described
by way of example with reference to the drawings, which show the following:
figure 1 in oblique projection, the apparatus according to the invention equipped
with spiral springs;
figure 2 in oblique projection, the apparatus according to the invention equipped
with torsion springs;
figure 3 the supination and the pronation movement of the forearm practised in traditional
fashion with dumb-bells;
figure 4 the radial adduction movement of the forearm practised in traditional fashion
with a swing bar;
figure 5 the ulnar adduction movement of the forearm practised in traditional fashion
with a swing bar;
figure 6 the radial abduction movement of the forearm practised in traditional fashion
with a swing bar;
figure 7 the ulnar abduction movement of the forearm practised in traditional fashion
with a swing bar;
figure 8 a torsion spring twisted over its entire length;
figure 9 a torsion spring twisted over part of its length;
figure 10 a cross-sectional view of a post design incorporating a torsion spring;
figure 11 the post of figure 10 viewed from the lefthand side;
figure 12 a cross-sectional view of the post of figure 10 taken along the line XII-XII;
and
figure 13 a rear view of the apparatus according to another embodiment of the invention.
[0019] As is indicated in figure 1, the apparatus consists of a base 1, which may have been
assembled from three round or square tubes with a diameter of about 20 mm and a length
varying between 30 and 50 cm. Mounted perpendicular to the base there are the vertical
shafts 5 and telescoping post 2 for the support of the working surface 3, on which
the elbows can be rested.
[0020] In the figures the adjustments of the height of the working surface 3 and the hand
grips 10 is realized by means of a discrete pin-and-hole connection between the enveloping
and the enveloped sections of post 2. As the holes in the enveloping section of post
2 have been bored at fixed distances from one another, discrete working levels can
be set. Alternatively, however, the enveloped section of post 2 may be provided with
a radially tapering keyway, the key seat being deepest at the top of the enveloped
section of post 2 and terminating virtually level with the outer diameter of the enveloped
post at its base. By further tightening of a bolt in the enveloping section of post
2 the working level will be set higher. In this preferred design it is possible to
achieve infinite adjustment of the working level.
[0021] Below the working surface 3 the supports 4 have been provided with the associated
sleeves 12, which have been fitted round the vertical shafts 5. At the upper end of
the vertical shafts the hand grips 10 have been attached, which are fastened with
the bolts 11. At the lower end of the vertical shafts, transverse arms 6 have been
mounted whose length may vary between 30 and 60 cm and whose diameter is about 25
mm, with spiral springs 8 attached to the ends of the arms by means of pins 7 so as
to be crosswise to the vertical shafts 5. The spiral-spring configuration can be adapted
to the capacities of the user.
[0022] Seated behind point 16, the user of the apparatus practises the following movements
of the forearm muscles by gripping the handles 10 with the palms of his or her hands:
- supination + flexion of biceps
- pronation + extension of triceps (only with this movement should the action of the
spring be reversed).
[0023] Standing behind point 16, the user of the apparatus practises the following movements
of the forearm muscles by gripping the handles 10 with his or her palms turned either
up or down:
- ulnar adduction + biceps + triceps
- radial adduction + biceps.
[0024] Standing in front of point 17, the user of the apparatus practises the following
movements of the forearm muscles by gripping the handles 10 with his or her palms
turned either up or down:
- ulnar abduction + triceps
- radial abduction + triceps + biceps.
[0025] In figure 2 the rotation of shafts 5 against resistance is further refined by the
installation of torsion springs 13. It stands to reason that the torsion-spring configuration
can be adapted to the user's capacities.
[0026] Figure 3 schematically represents the supination movements according to 14 and the
pronation movements according to 15, when practised by the rotation of dumb-bells
in traditional fashion.
[0027] The movements of the forearm muscles performed with the aid of a traditional swing
bar are represented in figure 4 for radial adduction, in figure 5 for ulnar adduction,
in figure 6 for radial abduction and in figure 7 for ulnar abduction.
[0028] Instead of the helical torsion springs 13 represented, flat torsion springs 16 are
preferably employed in actual practice. The spring characteristic of these can be
set without replacement of the springs, as required in the case of the helical torsion
springs 13, by limiting the effective blade length available for twisting.
[0029] Figures 8 and 9 illustrate how the spring characteristic can be set by variation
of the blade length available for twisting. A blade gripped at both ends will require
a torque M
1 for ratation through an angleOC. If, however, the lower gripping point is shifted
higher up the blade, a smaller blade length remains available for twisting. The torque
M
2 required to effect rotation through the same angle α will now be greater than
M1.
[0030] Variable gripping of a blade accommodated in a post can be achieved by means of a
groove made in the longitudinal direction of the post. In the non-tightened position,
a bolt can freely move up and down the groove and after having been tightened, it
grips the blade at the height set.
[0031] In the preferred embodiment, as represented in figures 10, 11 and 12, the torsion
spring 16 mounted in a post is gripped at its lower end by a clamping plate 17 and
at its upper end by rotating disc 18 to which the handle 10 has been attached. Now
the adjustment of the tension of torsion spring 16 is effected by means of a vertically
adjustable clamping disc 19 which is guided through two round notches 20 and 21 up
and down slits 22 in the post. By providing a notch 21 with a screw thread it is possible
to fasten the clamping disc 19 at a certain height with the aid of nut 23. The notches
20 and 21 prevent the clamping disc 19 from turning round with the torsion spring
16, whilst the thickness of the clamping disc 19 and the fine fit of the blade 16
in the clamping disc 19 preclude an oscillating tilt.
[0032] Besides the constructions with springs described hereinbefore, it is also possible
to derive an opposing force from a post configuration comprising a cable or chain
20 which is connected to a transverse arm 21 mounted on the rotatable means of attachment
of the shaft, a pulley or sprocket wheel 24 and a pendent weight 25.
[0033] Figure 13 depicts an embodiment in which the hand grips 10 have been turned wholly
inward and the transverse arms 21 wholly outward. The weights 25 are virtually in
their uppermost position. The cables or chains 20 are passed over pulleys or sprocket
wheels 24, respectively, which have been fitted underneath the working surface 3 by
means of ears 26 on the telescoping post 2.
[0034] If desired, the pulley or sprocket wheel 24 may deviate from a circular shape and
be designed, for instance, to be elliptical.
[0035] As it is desirable to know the amount of muscular energy expended especially in heavy
athletics, the apparatus according to the invention may be provided with measuring
devices known in the art.
1. An apparatus for exercising the arm muscles of the human body, characterized in
that the apparatus comprises a base with an inclined working surface mounted above
it, whose heigth is adjustable and which is adjoined on both sides by means of sleeves
by shafts, which shafts are so mounted on the base as to be rotatable about their
long axis against resistance and which are provided at their top above the working
surface with transversely attached hand grips by means of which the shafts can be
loaded with a torque on their long axes.
2. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the rotatable means of
attachment of each vertical shaft to the base comprises a transverse arm of which
the end carries a spiral spring disposed crosswise to the shaft.
3. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the rotatable means of
attachment of each shaft to the base comprises a torsion spring mounted round the
shaft or in line with it.
4. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the shafts which are rotatable
about their long axes are substantially vertical.
5. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the resistance of the
rotatable means of attachment of the shafts to the base is effected by means of compressed-air
springs, provision being made for limitation with the aid of an adjustable valve.
6. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the resistance of the
rotatable means of attachment of the shafts to the base is effected by means of hydraulic
springs, provision being made for limitation with the aid of an adjustable valve.
7. An apparatus according to claim 2, characterized in that the torsion spring consists
of a torsion blade mounted within a post, whose tension can be variably adjusted.
8. An apparatus according to claim 7, characterized in that for the variable adjustment
of the spring tension at least one slit has been provided in the longitudinal direction
of the post in order to guide a clamping member.
9. An apparatus according to claim 8, characterized in that the clamping member consists
of a clamping disc provided with two round notches which have been disposed in two
slits, whilst the disc is so designed as to afford a fine fit for the torsion blade.
10. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the rotatable means of
attachment of the shaft comprises a transverse arm mounted above the base, at the
end of which arm a cable is connected crosswise to the shaft, which cable is passed
over a pulley and provided at its end with a weight.
11. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the rotatable means of
attachment of the shaft comprises a transverse arm mounted above the base, at the
end of which arm a chain is connected crosswise to the shaft, which chain is passed
over a sprocket wheel and provided at its end with a weight.
12. An apparatus according to claim 10, characterized in that the pulley has an elliptical
circumference.
13. An apparatus according to claim 11, characterized in that the sprocket wheel has
an elliptical circumference.
14. An apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that it is provided with a
measuring device for the measurement of the amount of muscular energy expended.